Voice quality network requirements
Some of the issues that must be considered when designing a network for VoIP are:
●
●In some applications, delays less than 150 ms can impact the perceived quality, particularly in the presence of echo.
●Long WAN transports must be considered as a major contributor to the network delay budget, averaging approximately
●Finally,
Again, there is a
●80 ms (milliseconds) delay or less yields the best quality.
●80 ms to 180 ms delay can give Business Communication quality. This delay range is much better than
●Delays exceeding 180 ms might still be quite acceptable depending on customer expectations, analog trunks used, codec type, and the presence of echo control in endpoints or network equipment.
The Converged Network Analyzer (CNA) system is capable of providing ongoing measurements of network delay (see CNA Application Performance Rating on page 254). CNA will also generate alarms when network delay rises to levels that are detrimental for voice quality. For more information on CNA, see The Converged Network Analyzer on page 344.
Codec delay
In addition to delay incurred in the network, codecs in the endpoints also add some delay. The delay of the G.711 codec is minimal. However, the G.729 codec, for example, adds:
●approximately 10 ms of algorithmic delay in each direction
●another 5 ms
●plus signal processing delays.
The compression algorithm in G.723.1 uses multiple blocks (called frames) of 30 ms voice samples per packet. This results in increased latency over codecs configured to use 20 ms or less samples per packet.
The G.722 codec adds a 0.82 ms delay.